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U.S. light-vehicle sales--aided by Chrysler Group, Volkswagen Group, Hyundai-Kia and Toyota Motor Corp.--rose 13 percent in March to 1.4 million units, with demand for smaller, fuel-efficient models, redesigned vehicles and pickups driving the gains.

Even with gasoline prices exceeding $4 a gallon in many parts of the country, the seasonally adjusted sales rate for March hit 14.4 million units. That was up from 13.06 million a year earlier but down from 15.1 million in February.

Overall demand increased 13 percent to 3.5 million units during the first quarter, offering more evidence that the industry’s steady recovery is on track despite mixed economic signals.

"The combination of credit availability, an improving economy, pent-up demand and even high fuel prices encouraging people to acquire newer, more fuel-efficient vehicles are all helping to drive industry sales," Reid Bigland, head of the Dodge brand and U.S. sales operations for Chrysler, said in a statement.

“There’s definitely a tailwind out there,” Bigland added.

Of the seven largest automakers, only Honda Motor Co. posted a drop in sales last month. The Japanese automaker said Honda division sales dipped 5 percent while Acura deliveries dropped 12 percent.

Chrysler Group’s U.S. sales rose 34 percent, its fifth straight month with an increase at least that high.

At Toyota Motor Corp., sales rose 15 percent to 203,282 units--its biggest gain since February 2011--as the automaker continued to recover from the earthquake in Japan 12 months earlier.

At General Motors, sales climbed 12 percent, with advances at Chevrolet and GMC offsetting declines at Buick and Cadillac. Ford Motor Co. said demand was up 5 percent, and sales at Nissan North America jumped 13 percent to 136,317 units.

Volkswagen AG said the VW brand's U.S. sales advanced 35 percent in March--the seventh consecutive month sales have climbed by that amount or more.

Subaru's U.S. car and light-truck volume rose 20 percent to 32,387 units. At Mazda, sales increased 5 percent last month and have advanced 27 percent to 82,023 year to date.

Hyundai Motor Co.’s Kia unit set a monthly sales record of 57,505 units, up 30 percent.

The rise in gasoline prices did not slow demand for some larger vehicles.

GM's full-sized pickup sales rose 14 percent.

Chrysler said deliveries at the Jeep brand surged 36 percent, and Ram pickup sales rose 18 percent despite gasoline prices that are climbing towards the record highs of 2008.